We were first introduced to what is here call a “slice” in New Zealand in 2005. It’s hard to describe what a slice is. It’s a dense, sweet-ish treat, about the size of a deck of cards. The packaged ones you get in the store are very close to granola bars; the ones you get at bakeries are closer to brownies or blondies (although they are often flavored with fruit or spices). We have always really liked them, and now we know that EP does too.
Category: Food and Drink
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Tonkotsu Ramen
After two days of thinking about Indonesia, I had a craving for that most un-Indonesian of foods…pork. Being in Japan, I thought I would see about one of the local food crazes right now, tonkotsu ramen or ramen noodles in a pork broth. (Not to be confused with pork bone tea.) I found a number of reviews that suggest that the best place to try this is at Kyushu Jengara Ramen, which has a couple of outlets around Tokyo but which has its main outlet in Akihabara, a neighborhood of comic books and videogames and disturbing young girls in maid uniforms. I went, joined by a colleague from UCSD, and ordered the kobonshan (medium-fatty) soup zenbu iri, or with everything it: slow cooked pork belly, roast pork loin, spicy codfish roe, hardboiled egg, and some other weird stuff.
The reviews were correct. This is fantastic, and incidentally it is also probably the most efficient fat and salt delivery system out there. But my very favorite thing about the place is that if you want more noodles, all you have to do is yell “kae dama!” and they come by with more ramen for your broth. Genius.
Zenbu Iri (“All the Way”)


